Monthly Archives: April 2015

This week’s book takes us to the savannas of East Africa. Follow through the eyes of an elephant calf as his herd searches for water and forages for food. What kind of fascinating animals will they run into?
Find out in Schuyler Bull’s Through Tsavo: A Story of an East African Savanna. Take a book, leave a book, and read on!

This spring brought many wonderful programs to the Aldo Leopold Nature Center, and the Spring Vacation Day programs were a special highlight. Every year during the spring breaks for the Madison area school districts, ALNC holds all-day programs for students ages 5-12, where they explore a range of science and nature topics, observe the spring habitats, and learn from ALNC’s experienced team of naturalists.

One of the most popular programs every year is our history-themed program, Pioneer Days. During this fun-filled day, students step back in time to learn what it was like to live as a pioneer in Wisconsin. Wearing bonnets, hats and skirts as pioneers might have worn, program participants lived life as pioneers, churning butter, grinding grain, washing laundry by hand, and even hauling water from the pond! Of course, there was plenty of fun to be had as well; students spend the afternoon playing pioneer games and trading and bartering in our ‘pioneer general store.’

This year’s participants during the Pioneer program day had an extra special treat when Kathe Crowley Conn, a local author, visited to share her new book about fascinating life of Juliette Kinzie, a pioneer and frontier author who lived in early 1800’s Wisconsin. Juliette Kinzie: Frontier Storyteller, published by the Wisconsin Historical Society Press, follows Juliette’s journey from a comfortable life out east in the early 1800’s to a rugged log cabin in what would later become Wisconsin.

Conn shared passages from her book, painting a vivid picture of Kinzie’s life for the students. Some favorite moments for the audience were when Conn shared the story about Kinzie’s ‘pet’ deer and when she shared a replica letter that Kinzie penned by hand and beautifully folded. The students were encouraged to imagine how they would have felt traveling to pioneer-era Wisconsin, and had many great questions for Conn about Kinzie’s life, hobbies, and legacy. The students then got to try writing letters with feather pens themselves. What a wonderful way to spend the day, exploring and learning about a fascinating character in Wisconsin’s history!

Hop on the school bus, because we’re going back, back, back in time this week at the Little Free Library! Join Ms. Frizzle and the gang as they explore the field of paleontology in the Jurassic era finding dinosaur bones. (Little known fact: this book is the first time Ms. Frizzle’s name is ever mentioned.) Take a book, leave a book, and read on!

Geared toward a more advanced young reader or adult, Robert Leonard Reid’s Arctic Circle: Birth and Rebirth in the Land of the Caribou explores the author’s journey through the mysterious Arctic as he follows the caribou through their annual breeding patterns. Written in his 70′s, Reid reflects on life and death while also delivering natural history quips in this charming travelogue.

The Little Free Library gets scientific this week with 175 Amazing Nature Experiments by G. Morgan! Ideal for parents and teachers alike, flip through this book to find a fun activity the whole family can enjoy and learn from. Take a book, leave a book, and read on!

Paths of the People: The Ojibwe in the Chippewa Valley by Tim Pfaff tranforms the Ojibwe oral tradition into a literary medium. Published by the Chippewa Valley Museum in Eau Claire, this book follows the local tribe through centuries of change and adaptation. Take a book, leave a book, and read on!